Monday - Friday, 6-9 a.m.

Host Tom Temin brings you the latest news affecting the federal community each weekday morning, featuring interviews with top government executives and contractors. Listen live from 6 to 9 a.m. or download archived interviews below.

Today's Interviews:

It's been called "the most authoritative source on the Pacific War available anywhere." The Navy revealed the 4,000-page war diary of Fleet Adm. Chester Nimitz to the world last night in an online event. Dr. Allen Benson is professor and library director at the U.S. Naval War College.

Many years have passed since the last U.S. service member had to down the contents of a K-ration can. The meal-ready-to-eat, or MRE, has revolutionized field rations over the past couple of decades. But the people behind the MRE never rest. They're always taking in soldier input, creating new menus and trying to please the battlefield palate.

The most recent breakthrough — pizza. Jim LeCollier is the individual rations branch chief at the Defense Logistics Agency, and Jeanette Kennedy, is senior food technologist on the Combat Rations Team, part of the Combat Feeding Directorate of the Army Natick Soldier Research, Development and Engineering Center. They talk about the latest developments in the MRE.

The Partnership for Public Service has mapped the future of federal Chief Human Capital Officers. The nonprofit starts with the premise that employees are agencies' most important resource. Partnership Vice President for Policy John Palguta fills in the details.

President Barack Obama is proposing a 1 percent pay raise for federal employees in his fiscal 2015 budget. That's one of the details coming out now, a week before the President formally submits his plan to Congress. Erik Wasson covers the budget for The Hill Newspaper.

The Army would shrink to its smallest size since before World War II, under the President's 2015 budget proposal. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel gave a preview. He outlined shrinkage of the entire military enterprise and cutbacks to the benefits now enjoyed by service members. As Federal News Radio's Jared Serbu reports, the Pentagon says it's trading size for military readiness.